Reason One is its refreshing twist on the tradition of the chase movie. This time around, the vehicles speeding from one end of Manhattan to the other–through, up, down, inside, under, around, and over all manner of gridlocked obstacles–aren’t cars. Welcome to the high velocity, high risk world of the New York bicycle messenger.

Reason Two is Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the role of Wilee, a Columbia law school drop out who somewhere on the road of life decided the wheels of justice just didn’t turn fast enough for him. The pay isn’t great (“Eighty bucks on a good day,” he narrates) but the thrills and challenges are. Favoring a stripped-down fixie with neither gears nor brakes, he’s fearless; the best of the best. “Goin’ down Broadway at 50 with no brakes-what could be better than that?”

The answer, it turns out, is not having a wackjob NYPD detective on your tail. That would be officer Bobby Monday, a psycho with a badge who could’ve graduated from the same police academy as Nicolas Cage’s Bad Lieutenant. He’s played by Michael Shannon, reason Number Three why this picture is so much better than it should be.

The bug-eyed actor was born to rivet and has a freaky field day with the part of a cop in the grip of a serious gambling problem. Monday’s in over his head with loan sharks, which is why his life depends on his intercepting the package Wilee’s rocketing toward a mysterious Chinatown address. Sources have informed him it contains a ticket worth $50,000.

Initially, the cop figures his car gives him the advantage. Then director/co-writer David Koepp (Secret Window) starts pulling pulse-pounding stunts out of his bag of tricks. The chase scenes are expertly shot with the audience often sharing the cyclist’s perspective as Wilee eludes his pursuer by riding against the traffic on one way streets, shooting through impossibly narrow spaces between street-clogging autos, soaring over fences, pedaling across the roofs and hoods of anything in his way and blowing through red lights.

Koepp minimizes the use of CGI; virtually all the riding in the movie is real, though he does make use of a digital effect that’s a pip: As our hero nears busy intersections, the filmmaker freezes the scene and we look on as Wilee instantaneously projects the outcome of potential routes through the maze of cars and pedestrians. An animated arrow shows what awaits if he makes this twist or that turn and watching him think fast is a blast. He’s got the instincts of a Generation Y Neal Cassady.

There’s not a lot more to the story. Sometimes keeping it simple is a good thing and Premium Rush is an excellent case in point. It’s a race-against-the-clock thriller that boasts an appealing lead, a villain who’s more fun than a barrel of Christopher Walkens, bigger laughs than you might expect and action sequences as breathtaking as they are brashly original.

Uh, unless they’re not. Original, that is. Columbia Pictures, Koepp and co-writer John Kamps presently are defendants in a copyright infringement suit filed by author Joe Quirk. He alleges the picture’s a rip off of the screenplay he presented to the studio based on his 1998 novel The Ultimate Rush, citing plot, character name, scene and Chinatown underworld motif similarities. It’s about a San Francisco messenger who runs into trouble similar to Wilee’s. Last month a federal judge declined to dismiss the claim.

Holy Fareed Zakaria, Batman! It’ll be a while before all the facts are known. No point in a Rush to judgement, so to speak. Until proof positive to the contrary has been provided I’ll continue to make the case that the latest from Koepp & Co. is one of the Summer’s wildest, most inventive rides; a lovably loopy adrenalin fest that definitely delivers.

All I can think is, “Really?” This is the same film I saw the trailers for to the point of boredom? I must give you credit, you make this film seem actually watchable and, what’s more, enjoyable! I’ll admit this did not appeal to me at all when I read about it and saw the trailers, though I like most of the actors. Your review makes me think I should at least put it in the queue once Netflix gets its hands on it. Damn you.

Doug-
I’m with you but to be honest, Rick’s is among the many positive reviews I’ve seen for this film. I’m stunned as well. It looks like an end of summer dump. But then again,Joseph Gordon Levitt and Michael Shannon together is probably worth the admission price.

It is one of the most positive I’ve seen, which is a bit freaky when you think about it. Oh, and I picture those scenes where the screen “freezes” and an arrow comes up to show the path our hero is going to take to resemble something out of “Family Circus.” That strikes me as hilarious.

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New England Underground Film Festival Seeks EntriesThe New England Underground Film Festival is now seeking entries for its 5th annual event, to be held October 3 at the University of Hartford’s Gray Conference Center, located in West Hartford, Connecticut. Programmed by Film Threat’s Phil Hall, this festival celebrates the best in contemporary underground cinema. The final deadline for entries is July 15; entry information is online at http://newenglanduff.webs.com.